Related "Wolf Blitzer" Articles

The 2012 election season rolls to its long-desired conclusion Tuesday night with hour upon hour of results on local stations, broadcast networks and cable news channels. ABC, CBS and NBC start their coverage at 7 p.m. Cable news will begin earlier. You can exp

Ohio was billed as the main battleground in the 2012 presidential election, but Florida was generating more talk Election Night. “The story right now has got to be Florida, Florida, Florida,” CNN's Wolf Blitzer said at 9:30. “Can you believe

More schedule changes in reaction to the school shootings in Connecticut: George Stephanopoulos and Elizabeth Vargas will host “Good Morning America” on Saturday. The program airs at 9 a.m. on WFTV-Channel 9. Josh Elliott, Amy Robach and Dan Harris

President Barack Obama departs the White House on Sunday afternoon for Connecticut. Photo credit: Brendan Hoffman/Getty Images UPDATE: President Obama's speech was carried across the major broadcast networks, ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC, as well as the cable news ch

Regular Monday daytime schedules will be jettisoned for coverage of Barack Obama's second inauguration as president. What to expect on television Monday? NBC: Its coverage starts at 10 a.m. and will run until 4 p.m. Brian Williams anchors from Capitol Hill joi

In news ratings, “NBC Nightly News” and Fox News Channel can again crow about placing first in their respective universes. For last week, “NBC Nightly News With Brian Williams” averaged 9.4 million viewers. “ABC World News With Di

President Barack Obama's State of the Union address will rearrange Tuesday prime time. The speech is scheduled to start at 9 on ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC, Fox News Channel, CNN, MSNBC, CNBC, Fox Business Network and Bloomberg. There will be responses by Sen. Marco Ru

After hearing the last budget debate in Congress, I became really worried about whether or not this nation could be united once again. After 9/11, we had a nation unite and become one. After the recent death of Osama Bin Laden, we saw our nation come together

If you want a break from the Casey Anthony coverage, you could catch Rep. Anthony Weiner's resignation this afternoon over a sexting scandal. Look for the resignation at 2 p.m. on CNN, Fox News Channel and MSNBC. Weiner, a New York Democrat, is expected to re

ABC, CBS and NBC have announced they will carry Obama's speech. Diane Sawyer will be joined by George Stephanopoulos on ABC. Scott Pelley anchors for CBS. Brian Williams will be joined by David Gregory on NBC.

Starting Aug. 8, "AC360," hosted by Anderson Cooper, will shift to 8 p.m. and replace "In the Arena." Cooper's program will repeat at 10 p.m. In the fall at 7 p.m., CNN will roll out a new program headline by Erin Burnett, formerly of CNBC. Her program will

By William E. Gibson, Washington Bureau WASHINGTON — Continued bickering on Thursday between South Florida House colleagues Allen West and Debbie Wasserman Schultz shows that these two political foes are never likely to reconcile. West, a Republican fro

CNN and a coalition of Florida Tea Party groups released details of a televised Republican presidential debate in Tampa Sept. 12. But the release does not indicate which candidates have committed to participate. The debate is scheduled for the Florida State F

Fox News says it will be going live from 6 a.m. Saturday to 1 a.m. Monday. Anchor Shepard Smith, a veteran of the Orlando market, will lead the coverage from 2 to 4 p.m. and 6 to 9 p.m. both days. "America's Newsroom" co-anchors Bill Hemmer and Martha MacCallu

Gotta give props to the Tea Party kid (teen? student?) who just asked the candidates a very straightforward question: How much of every dollar I earn should I be able to keep? CNN's Wolf Blitzer tossed the question to Huntsman, who handled it rather ham-handed

TAMPA — OK, so it's obvious who's at center stage because both Mitt Romney and Rick Perry were given the central two spots, more or less, at the CNN/Tea Party debate at the Florida Fairgrounds, just as they were last week in California: so everyone can

TAMPA – As expected, the GOP presidential debate began with CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer resparking the fight between Texas Gov. Rick Perry and former Mass. Gov. Mitt Romney and they went for blood, but Blitzer brought in most of the other six as well. In the

Remember then U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson's now-famous description of the Republican Party's health-care plan: “Don't get sick…And if you do, die quickly.” Conservatives immediately jumped on the Orlando Democrat's blistering comments, made on the

OK, so it wasn't the 19 million people who tuned into NBC for “Sunday Night Football” to watch the Jets and the Cowboys. But the folks at CNN are claiming that lots of people watched the eight Republican presidential candidates debate last night in